Unfiltered Notebook 11/14: N’Keal Harry checks in, defense prepping for versatile Eagles running game – Patriots.com

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One of the key areas the Patriots defense will be looking to get on track in Philadelphia will be stopping the run. The Pats gave up over 200 yards rushing to Lamar Jackson and the Ravens, but Baltimore’s unique attack doesn’t exactly translate to the rest of the league.

Still, the Pats had shown some holes on the ground before the Ravens, allowing 159 yards to the Browns rushing attack led by Nick Chubb, 145 to the Redskins (65 of which came on one touchdown-scoring play) and 135 to Frank Gore and the Bills.

If there’s one statistical weakness thus far for the Patriots defense it’s against the run where they’re 26th in yards-per-attempt and 14th in run defense DVOA. It’s not a glaring terrible problem, but it’s one that the team will be aiming to improve upon in the second half and that starts against a dangerous trio of backs in Philadelphia — Jordan Howard, Miles Sanders and Darren Sproles.

“Sanders is used more in the passing game, kind of like [Darren] Sproles,” said Bill Belichick this week. “I’d say it’s more Sanders and Sproles are more similar. They’re both explosive players, certainly can run the ball and they can run inside, run outside, make explosive plays, catch the ball, screen passes, turn check-downs into long catch-and-run plays, things like that.

“Howard is a tough downhill runner. He plays in the passing game too, but I’d say those guys show up more in some more explosive plays – wheel routes, seam routes, some plays down the field that are pretty challenging for the defense. They can put five good receivers out there, whoever they are, whatever personnel group they’re in.”

The stress in the passing game will be a unique problem for the Patriots, one that Devin McCourty was keenly aware of.

“You know, I think that’s the tough thing. Like, you can come out there in 12 [personnel] and if they go empty, you now have five receivers on the field,” said McCourty. “So, again, it comes down to kind of understanding that, understanding where guys are aligned, how they want to attack us, who’s the threat in what situation.”

But it’s not just the downhill running of Howard or the receiving ability of Sanders and Sproles. The Eagles run a variety of Run-Pass Options as well which can put a defense on their heels.

“The RPOs – there’s a couple different versions of them – they use both and they have,” said Belichick. “They’ll definitely run some. But they have a couple different varieties of it; it’s not just one way of doing it. They have a couple of different looks, so it’s a challenge to the defense that way.”

Overall, it speaks to the how challenging the Eagles offense is. Their playbook is an offshoot of Kansas City’s and contains many unique twists that will give the Patriots defense a variety of things to prepare for.

“That’s what’s tough about this league, and I think especially when you have an offense like this with [Doug] Pederson, and how they’re able to game plan and dial things up,” said McCourty. “They do a really good job of creating things that they want from an offensive standpoint, so we have to be prepared and ready to go defensively to know what they want to do, and then be ready to adjust on some of the things that we just haven’t seen that they’re going to bring up.”